Okay, now I'm starting to see the benefit of obama's health plan where all of us old people are supposed to just die instead of using up scarce medical resources. Death would be easier than having to live to pay off this much debt.
Where do you get that much money? Contact the Klingons and take out a second mortgage on the solar system?
Watchdog: Financial Bailout Support Could Reach $23.7 Trillion
The total price tag for federal support stemming from the financial crisis
could reach $23.7 trillion in the long run, the government's top bailout
watchdog says in a new report to Congress.
FOXNews.com
Monday, July 20, 2009
Neil Barofsky, the inspector general for the Troubled Asset Relief Program,
plans to deliver his report Tuesday to the House Oversight and Government Reform
Committee.
The $23.7 trillion figure is admittedly a high-ball number and reflects the
total potential gross exposure, but Barofsky in his prepared testimony notes
that the TARP -- which started as a $700 billion bailout -- has expanded well
beyond that.
"TARP has evolved into a program of unprecedented scope, scale and complexity.
Moreover, TARP does not function in a vacuum but is rather part of the broader
government efforts to stabilize the financial system," the report says.
"The total potential federal government support could reach up to $23.7
trillion," the report estimates, factoring in commitments from "dozens of
programs" implemented throughout the federal government since 2007.
In supporting documentation obtained by FOXNews.com, the inspector general's
office explains that the $23.7 trillion spans about 50 "initiatives or programs"
created by federal agencies in the wake of the economic crisis.
The estimate covers commitments that could come from programs at the Federal
Reserve, Treasury Department, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal
Housing Finance Agency, the Federal Housing Administration, the Department of
Veterans Affairs and other agencies.
It notes that the total "financial exposure" of TARP and related programs alone
could reach $3 trillion.
While not a firm or official figure, the estimate has the potential to send
lawmakers into sticker shock.
"The potential financial commitment the American taxpayers could be responsible
for is of a size and scope that isn't even imaginable," Rep. Darrell Issa,
ranking Republican on the oversight committee, said in a written statement. "If
you spent a million dollars a day going back to the birth of Christ, that
wouldn't even come close to just $1 trillion -- $23.7 trillion is a staggering
figure."
In the report, Barofsky also says that the Treasury Department has "repeatedly
failed" to adopt recommendations that his office believes will bring more
transparency and accountability to the execution of the bailout.